第95回日本細菌学会総会

講演情報

オンデマンド口頭発表

[ODP23] 5. 病原性-c. 細胞内侵入・細胞内寄生

[ODP-139] Bordetella bronchiseptica utilizes Acanthamoeba castellanii as a temporal niche

Dendi Krisna Nugraha1,山口 博之2,堀口 安彦1,3 (1阪大微研・分子細菌学,2北大院・保科・病態解析,3阪大・感染症総合教育研究拠点)


Apart from its ability to infect animals, Bordetella bronchiseptica (Bb) is considered to persistently survive in the environment; however, its environmental lifestyle is poorly understood. In this study, we explored the possible interaction between Bb and Acanthamoeba castellanii (Ac) as a representative of environmental protozoa. Unlike bacteria that serve as amoeba food sources, phagocytosed Bb resisted amoeba digestion and escaped to extracellular milieu through contractile vacuoles (CVs), intracellular compartments involved in osmoregulation. Furthermore, Bb survived and proliferated for at least 28 days of co-culture with the amoeba. Bordetellae harbor the two-component system called BvgAS that controls the reversible phenotypic conversions between an avirulent (Bvg- phase) and a virulent (Bvg+ phase) phenotype. Bb mutant locked in the Bvg- phase but not in the Bvg+ phase survived and proliferated in the co-culture with the amoeba. Microscopic analyses revealed that the Bvg+-phase locked mutant was more efficiently internalized and targeted by the amoeba digestion pathway than the Bvg--phase locked mutant. After 7 days of co-culture, the dead cells of the Bvg+-phase locked mutant were accumulated in giant food vacuoles (GFVs). These data suggest that Bb resists predation by Ac in a Bvg phase-dependent manner and that Ac is a potential transient environmental host for Bb.